Two years ago I got braces.

I started this blog to catalog the entire experience, because getting braces in my mid-twenties was pretty much the only interesting thing happening to me at the time. I was two months from graduating and I craved for my next adventure. I half jokingly labeled the next chapter of my life as “Social Suicide” (thank you, Tina Fey). I wanted to use comedy as a way to hide the fact that I was actually quite nervous about the entire situation. My smile had always held me back. I was shy because of my teeth, and I never liked being in photos, and whenever I did get photographed I always smiled with a closed mouth. It was a huge insecurity of mine and I wanted to get rid of it.

But the thing about changing yourself is that everyone will eventually find out that you’re trying to change yourself. People begin to look at you more closely, trying to figure out exactly what’s going on and what about you started it all. When I told my friends, some of them were pretty excited for me, and then there were those that never noticed my teeth at all. But I did. I noticed them, and other people noticed them, just like they noticed my skin and my eyes and my body shape. 

And when it comes to changing our bodies, in this world of “self-love” and acceptance, it almost feels like you’re betraying your kin by conforming to the corporate culture of a singular definition of “beauty.” Straight teeth, slim body, perfect hair… I found myself trapped in this pit of narcissism, and it sucked. I needed a way out, I need some sort of direction to calm the frustration that lived under my skin.  

So in hopes of finding a positive, metal-mouthed role model for my life, turned to the one and only, Ugly Betty. Every time Betty Suarez learned a lesson, I learned a lesson. I watched her life unfold before my eyes, hour after hour, and cringed at her optimism; the type that gets you into the most horrible positions, but when it pays off, it pays off. And I loved that about her! I loved how hard she worked and how challenged she was by the world around her! And most importantly I loved how she always failed before she could succeed. 

In one week I will be getting my braces off. 

Looking back to when I started this blog, I remember telling myself, “Kai, you better start doing interesting things.” I needed to find excuses to write because I wanted to be a writer. I wanted to live a life worthy of a blog. I also secretly wanted my biggest insecurity to churn out the best time of my life, to eventually be turned into a mini-series of maybe even a wonderful gay-cult-comedy for Gaysians. I wanted Betty Suarez hilarity with Buffy/Angel angst with a handful of Gossip Girl glam! 

And did that happen? Not so much. 

Because I am not a gritty/glam kindda guy. I do not wake up in random beds every Sunday morning, I do not find myself caught in out-of-context-drag, and I most certainly do not immolate myself with alcohol for shits and giggles and #nothingelsetodo. And so instead, I focused in on the sex and the drama that occurred in my life because I thought it would make me more interesting. I swept away the vulnerability and the vicious cycle of self-pity because I didn’t want to bother with them. I didn’t want to be sad anymore, so I continually sold myself short because I wanted to be sexy and wild. 

But what was most strange was the anxiety I carried around with me whenever I posted an entry. I was scared of having the people in my day-to-day life (the old friends, the new friends, the work friends, the forgotten friends) read about the stories I casually shared with the Interweb. I fretted over whether or not the Kai on paper properly reflect the Kai in real-life. I wondered if friendships changed when consumed through a different medium, and if so, was there a version of Kai that felt more real and honest than the other? At the end of the day, between Facebook, Twitter and Tumblr, it all just seems like one big experiment in narcissism.

Despite all this, I still want to find ways to stop hating myself for being all the things I am and I also want to finally  be able to smile with my teeth. I’m part-way there on the former and I’m almost there on the latter. I’ve learned to give myself some credit by walking away and letting go when I needed to, and I’ve recognized that the only way to be good is to do good, no matter how uncomfortable the choice, act, and fallout may be. Narcissism is a dangerous game. Too many photos of yourself and you begin to loose yourself. 

And now that I’m reflecting on these past two years, I realize now that my story really is changing. It hasn’t been dramatic or epic or climactic, but it has been quiet, thoughtful and full of surprises. Choosing what to let happen and what to force forward, learning when to step back and when to stand down, thinking critically about all the different lines to cross in face of greater and more challenging adversity, all of these tiny little stories make up the narrative of a life I am now beginning to really feel like I can call my own, and that’s a story worth holding onto. 

Why can’t any of us seem to fucking focus on shit? 

I don’t think I have ADD. My younger cousin of 13 has ADHD, so I know what that looks like. But I’m not a doctor so I can’t diagnose myself, and I also can’t pretend to know what it looks like just because my cousin has it. My older sister has ADD, and she never figured that out until later on in life, which to be quite honest, explains a lot. Everything explains a lot once you get older. But my inability (our inability, come on people, I know I’m not alone) to focus and take on one task at a time is fucking bullshit. 

I gave myself a guideline to finish my Pilot by my 26th birthday. I’m two days away, and I’m still not done. Instead, I’ve got multiple drafts of the same idea, each with a different tone and direction for each character. It’s fucking frustrating. I wake up early, go to some chic, cool, coffee shop to try and do some writing, but it never really works. I sit there for about three hours, work for about 45 minutes, and the rest I’m bumming around online reading the “news” and getting depressed about the world. 

I also can’t do any work at home. I have no space. I have no desk. I need a desk. But it can’t be just any desk, it needs to be the perfect desk with the perfect hight and the perfect chair. This may sound insane, but it’s actually not. I need to create the perfect environment, a space that is conducive for creation so that I can (pretend to) create.

Sometimes I think being a writer is the easy way out. It’s an excuse most dreamers use for ten, fifteen or twenty years of their lives so that they can bum around, “do things” and call it “research”. But out of those thousands, maybe 5 become actual writers (and by that, I mean they can make a living without working in retail or some silly desk job). Am I one of those people? Is my destiny set for mediocrity? Am I just delaying the inevitable? My dream is to produce television, but first I want to write for television. I want to tell stories about Canadians, stories that visibly reflect what I see and what I think other people around me see. I want to put Toronto on the fucking map. Toronto deserves to be on the fucking Map. Toronto deserves to be destroyed by Aliens on the silver screen!

But the big questions is: Am I on the right path?

Fuck if I know, but I’m going to give it a shot. I’m going to work part time, party, see things, travel, take classes, do some recreational drugs and call it research. 

“For Sale: Baby Shoes, Never Worn.” 

***

In the 1920s, Ernest Hemingway bet ten dollars that he could write a complete story in just six words. He wrote and he won, calling it his best piece of writing. 

(Source: theworldandback, via schaaa)

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24 Oct 11 at 2 pm

From Greg to me, one Gaysian to another. 

"Seriously, as a writer slash artist you need to be at some point in your life, desperate. You can’t grow if you don’t risk anything. Spend $1000, put down 2 months of rent in a shitty room downtown, if you can’t find a job in 2 months, move back home, but that’s a valid experience. Don’t just sit there at home worrying about what might happen, do it, and fuck it up if you have to. I mean it’s built into life. That’s why people love trainwrecks and natural disasters, war, celebrity death and horror movies. It’s the fascination with the tragedy of human existence, and mortality."

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18 Sep 11 at 2 am

William Faulkner (via pixie-commander)

"Perhaps they were right putting love into books. Perhaps it could not live anywhere else"

"Write.

In order to be able to call yourself a writer, all you have to do is write. But I have another piece of advice: Don’t go passing out business cards emblazoned with that word just yet. (…)

Ignore James Brown’s advice to get up offa that thing — sit down on that thing and write. It doesn’t matter what you write, but it matters that you write.

It also matters that you read — and, similarly, the what isn’t as important as the that: that you read. Read literary classics and airport novels and graphic novels. Read biographies and memoirs and as-told-tos. Read magazines and newspapers and blogs. Read about people and places and things real and imagined.

But learn to distinguish between bad writing and good writing and great writing. Notice the style and tone and technique of the great stuff. Don’t try to imitate it, but recognize it and what it does for your reading experience. Think about what you want the experience to be like for your readers.

Don’t forget, though, the most important reason to write: for your own enjoyment — the joy of creation, the joy of reading the story you had to write because nobody else had done so until you came along. Don’t write with any goal in mind except this one: to complete a story — a novel, a novella, a short story, a short short story — so that you can read it. (…)

What are you waiting for?"

and I just woke up with this pit of anxiety in my stomach.

There is so much fear and self doubt right now inside of me and I have no idea where it is coming from.  All through high school I had dreams that I wanted to pursue. I threw all my energy into my studies and extracurricular’s; and I did well. I worked my ass off for what I wanted and I always got it. And then I got rejected from every university that I applied to for theatre, film and photography.

I don’t think I ever really recovered from all of those rejections. I feel like as if deep down there’s still this silent fear that subconsciously keeps me from really trying for anything… being the bold guy I used to be who took charge of his life. I have been trying so hard to recapture that drive and motivation, Rachel-Berry-esque even but I have no idea where it went after high school.

I feel like I’d do well in teachers college, but one of my former educators, who is now also my friend told me in grade 12 to never become a High School teacher because I would be settling if I did.

Is this what everyone feels? Like as if we might be bound for greatness, but just with no idea if we’ll ever get there? All of us with dreams that we never really achieve, and then just realize that it’s better to just… get your shit together and do the 9 to 5.

There goes another lemming.